SourcePhysicists, mathematicians, philosophers and that guy talking to himself on a street corner all have opinions about validity of time travel.
So does Dr. James Cramer, professor Emeritus of Physics at the University of Washington. He wants to make it a reality.
But Cramer's form of time travel is not the teleportation characterized by Hollywood and science fiction. As time travel goes, Cramer thinks in baby steps. He's working on the possibility receiving a message milliseconds before it's sent.
SourcePhysicists, mathematicians, philosophers and that guy talking to himself on a street corner all have opinions about validity of time travel.
So does Dr. James Cramer, professor Emeritus of Physics at the University of Washington. He wants to make it a reality.
But Cramer's form of time travel is not the teleportation characterized by Hollywood and science fiction. As time travel goes, Cramer thinks in baby steps. He's working on the possibility receiving a message milliseconds before it's sent.
It's called quantum entanglement. It's an incredibly strange form of quantum physics that essentially ties two (or more) particles together, where if you do one thing to one (change spin, etc.) it also applies to the other. I don't really have a full understanding of it, but that appears to be the basics of it.Originally Posted by lordikon
What I want to know is WHY "spooky action at a distance" works, and how. I understand that it does seem to work, but I want to understand the physics behind it. When one photon a galaxy away changes, how does it instantly tell the other to change as well? Understanding this and being able to control it (or at least harness it), would be a giant leap in physics for mankind.
Originally Posted by doomlord52
This isn't exactly time travel. All your doing is compensating for the time light takes to travel a distance. Technically speaking it will still be Causation -> Reaction. When someone definitively creates a Reaction -> Causation situation that ISN'T simply compensating for light's travel time, THEN we'll have a form of backwards time travel. However, if that was possible it's very likely the universe (or the time-machine) would already have been destroyed due to a feedback loop.
It's called quantum entanglement. It's an incredibly strange form of quantum physics that essentially ties two (or more) particles together, where if you do one thing to one (change spin, etc.) it also applies to the other. I don't really have a full understanding of it, but that appears to be the basics of it.
Actually, it's all tying together now. Dr. Who is actually a factual recounting of occurences from a parellel universe in which we made ourselves Time Lords. We did so by mastering time travel, going back and being born with the universe and then infusing our own being with the threads of creation which leads to the virtual immortality that Time Lords possess. I'm actually glad they left creation of this recounting to the British. If it had been done by us Americans... it would be mindless explosions, boobies, and no plot at all.... we have plenty of those shows and movies already.
How do you get two particles entangled in the first place? he mentions they are created at the same time but that means it would be created in the same PLACE!? so how would you get these particles as far out as a Million light year away?: If you took a pair of photons created at the same time and altered one of those photons, in theory the other photon would be altered instantly -- even if it was separated by an entire galaxy.
But what if we are actually removing a dimension and dropping 2d time into a 1d point. Instant as all time is the same time.Originally Posted by kppanic
I had read somewhere (or imagined LOL) that this "spooky action at distance" happens due to multiverse.
Once two particles become entangled, they are entangled forever and lets say one particle is a billion-light years away.
If that particle gains a new information (charge, spin, etc) the other entangled particle HAS to take the same property. How does this information get relayed? It should happen one billion year afterwards but instead it's instantaneous. This is when multiverse theory comes into play.
When you observe this one particle one billion light year away, in essense in our "alternate" universe(s) these particles are already "entangled" and we simply "flip" onto this new universe with the two particles with the said spin and charge. Because time is considered as one of our 4-dimension, and string theory takes us into 10 (maybe 11) dimensions, through Calaubi-Yau manifolds we can "bend" this 4-dimension like we can bend a 2D object through 3D to make a "wormhole", this information or this new, "alternate" universe, rather is warped into ours.
It's like as though we have two particles with every single spin and charge and whatnot in all multiverse and once we decide to observe one particle a certain way, that ONE multiverse with the said property warps into ours. This explains the "instantaneous" information travel because there's really no "light" that travels to relay this information.
Sure, I understand quantum entanglement, or at least the theory behind it, what I'm wondering is under what process does entanglement itself operate? How is it that two entangled particles communicate over a vast distance? Obviously something connects them, but how?Originally Posted by doomlord52
This isn't exactly time travel. All your doing is compensating for the time light takes to travel a distance. Technically speaking it will still be Causation -> Reaction. When someone definitively creates a Reaction -> Causation situation that ISN'T simply compensating for light's travel time, THEN we'll have a form of backwards time travel. However, if that was possible it's very likely the universe (or the time-machine) would already have been destroyed due to a feedback loop.
Quote:
It's called quantum entanglement. It's an incredibly strange form of quantum physics that essentially ties two (or more) particles together, where if you do one thing to one (change spin, etc.) it also applies to the other. I don't really have a full understanding of it, but that appears to be the basics of it.Originally Posted by lordikon
What I want to know is WHY "spooky action at a distance" works, and how. I understand that it does seem to work, but I want to understand the physics behind it. When one photon a galaxy away changes, how does it instantly tell the other to change as well? Understanding this and being able to control it (or at least harness it), would be a giant leap in physics for mankind.
This is the information I was seeking. Obviously this is just one theory, but it's attempting to theorize how the entanglement itself works, which is what I'm curious about. +repOriginally Posted by kppanic
I had read somewhere (or imagined LOL) that this "spooky action at distance" happens due to multiverse.
Once two particles become entangled, they are entangled forever and lets say one particle is a billion-light years away.
If that particle gains a new information (charge, spin, etc) the other entangled particle HAS to take the same property. How does this information get relayed? It should happen one billion year afterwards but instead it's instantaneous. This is when multiverse theory comes into play.
When you observe this one particle one billion light year away, in essense in our "alternate" universe(s) these particles are already "entangled" and we simply "flip" onto this new universe with the two particles with the said spin and charge. Because time is considered as one of our 4-dimension, and string theory takes us into 10 (maybe 11) dimensions, through Calaubi-Yau manifolds we can "bend" this 4-dimension like we can bend a 2D object through 3D to make a "wormhole", this information or this new, "alternate" universe, rather is warped into ours.
It's like as though we have two particles with every single spin and charge and whatnot in all multiverse and once we decide to observe one particle a certain way, that ONE multiverse with the said property warps into ours. This explains the "instantaneous" information travel because there's really no "light" that travels to relay this information.
Quote:
Originally Posted by doomlord52
This isn't exactly time travel. All your doing is compensating for the time light takes to travel a distance. Technically speaking it will still be Causation -> Reaction. When someone definitively creates a Reaction -> Causation situation that ISN'T simply compensating for light's travel time, THEN we'll have a form of backwards time travel. However, if that was possible it's very likely the universe (or the time-machine) would already have been destroyed due to a feedback loop.
It's called quantum entanglement. It's an incredibly strange form of quantum physics that essentially ties two (or more) particles together, where if you do one thing to one (change spin, etc.) it also applies to the other. I don't really have a full understanding of it, but that appears to be the basics of it.
I wouldn't dare mess with the past, if it were possible. There's no way to know what you could unintentionally effect. My luck I'd stop 9/11 and come back to the present and the U.S. will have been nuked by China or something. Anything could happen.
You could also look into String Theory... there's a ton of theories behind how everything functions or exists, so it's really hard to say since all are about equally plausible since they exist in the realm of theory. I'd still like to believe it's somewhere in between all of them and we're just getting bits and pieces of the truth here and there.Originally Posted by lordikon
Sure, I understand quantum entanglement, or at least the theory behind it, what I'm wondering is under what process does entanglement itself operate? How is it that two entangled particles communicate over a vast distance? Obviously something connects them, but how?
This is the information I was seeking. Obviously this is just one theory, but it's attempting to theorize how the entanglement itself works, which is what I'm curious about. +rep
I wouldn't dare mess with the past, if it were possible. There's no way to know what you could unintentionally effect. My luck I'd stop 9/11 and come back to the present and the U.S. will have been nuked by China or something. Anything could happen.
Cosmic intuition??Originally Posted by tpi2007
Time travel discussions are always interesting, but I think we can take two things for granted:
1. A message being received before it's completed is already possible. We do it everyday, be it in normal human to human communication, where we already know what the other person is going to say, or when we are typing an sms and the phone already knows what word we want even before it's fully typed. With further advancements in processing power and AI routines, the phone can even sense context, relate our message to the previous one, tie it together with our way of writing and thinking and basically have a high accuracy in predicting the whole message. Not exactly 100% correct all the time, but it would enable a message to be sent even before it's written.
What would stop those other universes from time traveling to our past and changing things? It still doesn't work.Originally Posted by tpi2007
2. Time travel is impossible in a universe. If time travel was possible, then somebody in the future would have already broken security protocols, traveled back in time and messed things up. It's just too tempting not to do it. The only possibility is time travel in paralel universes, where we can travel back to a "photocopy" of our past and change things, but they won't reflect themselves in our universe.
what if this is the messed up timeline, and in the other one we are all super intelligent beings who know everything.Originally Posted by tpi2007
2. Time travel is impossible in a universe. If time travel was possible, then somebody in the future would have already broken security protocols, traveled back in time and messed things up. It's just too tempting not to do it. The only possibility is time travel in paralel universes, where we can travel back to a "photocopy" of our past and change things, but they won't reflect themselves in our universe.